I have a better chance of arm of being able to mould a reflection in such a way that people look on how to people of color often look unfilled there are two ways that i've noticed that being done and that is that i feel like a lot of cinematographers fell makers have historically just thrown lots and lots of light so that you can see everybody and um and every and everything and that's just that's one way to do it know it's appropriate in some situations and other ways are and this is this is sort of an older school way but um especially on film because film and digital erred are very different in terms of how they handle shadows and things on the darker side um just throw blue light at someone with darker skin 'cause i don't know why honestly though i what is what does that do what does that do when we watch screen i guess it neutralizes the warmth those are the film days and film was balanced in such a way that the dark didn't have a lot of latitude like the darker tones in the scale of zero to one hundred ira which is a measurement of light didn't have a lot of definition nowadays that's different as we've gone into ditch at all and and i would i hope because of the way we're looking at lots of different skin towns although i think it's just it did a property of that that the medium i've heard i've heard the fresh prince be brought up as an example of maybe not not nailing this i mean this is this is a novel is an entirely black cast that was lit almost entirely poorly i mean i wouldn't want to say that i it's it's a product of the time and also that was a sitcom right so that was what that was the way to go about it on a sitcom at that time or that's how they did it they did it i don't think that's how i would do it i don't think it's how things would be done hopefully not how things would be done now but also that's a broad comet yet what the effect like what do we see as viewers when it's not with when in what what do we see as viewers that would have not done correctly i think that people internalized that there that.